Will energy shortage be overcome?
Pakistan continues to face an average shortage of 4,000 megawatts in the power sector owing to a substantial disconnect between installed power capacity and actual generation.

Small and medium-sized
industrial and commercial enterprises and households which cannot
afford these high-cost alternatives have frequently been at the rough
end of the stick.
Despite hydropower being the cheapest
source of electricity for Pakistan, the prohibitively high capital costs
to supplement the existing hydro resources has distorted the
hydro-thermal ratio in the power generation mix and resulted in a
significant increase in energy cost.
In the absence of
cutting edge technology and transmission network challenges, the
indigenisation cost of solar and wind-based power is untenable.
Pakistan has also been looking forward to electricity imports from central Asia to mitigate pressing power shortages.
Central
Asia-South Asia Electricity Transmission and Trade Project (CASA)
through which Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan will supply 1,300MW of
electricity to Pakistan during the summer season, was formally launched
last May. The fragile security situation in Afghanistan has already led
to upward cost revisions in the project which will ultimately have an
impact on the final tariff.
However, Prime Minister Nawaz
Sharif’s plans — to add to the national grid and overcome the acute
electricity shortage by 2018 — have been boosted by the large funding
received under the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor framework.
The
project has essentially provided coal-based (especially Thar coal)
energy financing which Pakistan was seeking to replace costlier
generation. Reportedly, 19 energy projects valuing $34bn have been
identified as ‘early harvest’, prioritised by the CPEC Joint Cooperation
Committee.
Primarily coal-based power projects, with a
cumulative capacity of about 5,000MW, would be operational during 2018.
The government expects that this generation, added to the output from
some other non-CPEC projects, will all but overcome the envisaged
8,000MW demand-supply gap.
There are apprehensions that
major power projects may not come on stream as per announced schedule
due to a variety of factors including technical, physical, and financial
limitations.
There are also questions about how well
the weak and unreliable Transmission and Distribution (T&D) system
will cope with this new influx of energy and whether there is enough
infrastructural support to transmit it across the country.
Currently
the system is barely able to cope with the existing power generated.
Transmission lines, cables and transformation copper parts are
dilapidated due to inadequate upgrading, repair and maintenance; while
most transformers are over-loaded with little or no maintenance by the
cash-strapped government-owned distributors.
To improve
system resilience, under the CPEC, an 878 kilometre long 4,000MW
transmission line is to be constructed for power dispersal from south
Pakistan to Lahore and Faisalabad in the North. This key link in the
transmission infrastructure is expected to be in place by end-2018 at
the earliest.
Power sector analysts, however, believe
that the timelines of power generation and transmission have not been
coordinated effectively.
No new infrastructure
initiative is planned to transmit power to energy-starved Balochistan
which currently does not have the capacity to absorb energy beyond
500MW.
Also the government´s desperation to end power
shortages has led to investors being offered far too generous tariffs,
saddling consumers with some of the most expensive electricity in the
region.
While new generation projects can help alleviate
the physical shortfall once completed, they have been negotiated
without being subjected to competition to provide electricity at an
optimum cost. The government has in fact offered up to 34.5pc annual
return on equity contributions under the CPEC and loans have been
obtained at 6pc interest rate, excluding insurance cost.
The
energy sector will continue to be a major focus in the lead-up to the
2018 elections since resolving this crisis figured prominently in
PML-N’s manifesto.
Due to almost 5pc greater electricity
generation by independent power producers (IPPs), the average duration
of load-shedding in urban areas has currently been reduced to 2-5 hours
per day, as compared to the 6-10 hours when PML-N assumed control.
However, chunks of rural areas continue to remain off-grid and those that are connected suffer through prolonged power outages.
The
government is still looking for quick fixes to the mega crisis. Since
taking office, the government has repeatedly stated its intent to
overcome load shedding in time for the next poll, likely in May 2018.
However, the PM’s regular stock taking of the progress notwithstanding,
the inadequate and obsolete T&D network and partial progress in
addressing the deep structural issues casts a shadow over the viability
of the timeline.
There is growing anxiousness among
PML-N leaders about the extent to which the government will be able to
tackle load shedding before they hit the road for the general election
campaign.
The government is low on credibility as regards
its pronouncements about solving energy constraints. Only one-fourth
of the Public Sector Development Program (PSDP) budget for water and
power projects has been released in the first eight months of the
ongoing fiscal year.
The Thar coalfields were declared a
‘game changer’ last April with the potential to generate 100,000MW of
electricity. The same is true for the liquefied natural gas (LNG)
agreement with Qatar. The outcomes that have followed have been
decidedly modest and show the sheer opacity under which the entire power
sector operates.
Even information on the basic nature
and intensity of the energy crisis as shared by concerned authorities is
often inconsistent. Transparency is needed in every area of the sector
so that a reliable picture can be built of its state of affairs.
According
to a Nationwide Public Opinion Poll, conducted last August by the
Pakistan Institute of Legislative Development and Transparency (PILDAT)
on assessing citizens’ views on ‘quality of governance’ in Pakistan,
only 38pc of the respondents expressed satisfaction with the performance
of the federal government to improve the electricity situation. A much
higher proportion (58pc) believes that the present government is
unlikely to solve the energy crisis.
No comments:
Post a Comment